Does Iran Comprehend Who Iran Is Negotiating With and About What?

April 21, 2026

Iran thinks Iran is negotiating with Trump about restrictions being imposed on Iran’s rights under the non-proliferation treaty.  Iran is totally incorrect.  This is a proxy issue.  Iran’s real issue is with Israel, and it is about Iran’s right to exist.  The Zionist agenda of Greater Israel, the foreign policy of the Netanyahu Israeli Government, requires the elimination of Iran as an organized sovereign state.  Why does the Iranian government think that Iran’s continued existence is something they want to negotiate? Going to Tehran Leverett, Flynt Check Amazon for Pricing.

After the Muslim world watched Washington destroy three of the “seven countries in five years” for Israel, why cannot the Iranian government comprehend that Iran is the fourth to be destroyed, with Turkey, Lebanon, and Saudi Arabia waiting their turn. 

Iran cannot gain anything from negotiations.  Iran can only fight for its life. If the Iranian government is incapable of comprehending this basic fact, “Turkey will be next Iran” as former Israeli prime minister Bennet said last February at a conference of Jewish organizations in the US. 

After all the decades of Israeli prime ministers holding up maps of Greater Israel, originally from the Nile to the Euphrates, now from the Nile to Pakistan, how is it possible that Muslims in the Middle East do not comprehend what this means for them?  See this.

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Paul Craig Roberts was Assistant Secretary of the Treasury in the Reagan administration, associate editor and columnist for the Wall Street Journal, Business Week’s first outside columnist, columnist for the Scripps Howard News Service, contributor to the editorial page of the Los Angeles Times, and columnist for the main French and Italian newspapers, and for Creators Syndicate in Los Angeles. He served in numerous academic appointments in US universities and was  appointed to the William E. Simon Chair for Political Economy at Georgetown University’s Center for Strategic and International Studies where his colleagues were Henry Kissinger, Zbigniew Brzezinski, James R. Schlesinger (one of his former professors), and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Adm. Thomas Moorer. His article, “How the Law Was Lost,” was published in the January 1999 Cardozo Law Review.